u h· for hi utiliti .Ircc parkin and r e fr m the d e ut the twi ted Detroit teachers and board are looking· the wrong way The Detroit teac rs strike drags on as we write this. Both ide appear to have a hidden agen . For the teachers the focus might be more on their retirement than the enefit of th kids. We ay that because over 40 percent of them are now eligible for retirement within the next five years. And, in their retirement benefit i based on the five years highest wage, they n ed mo money, mo money, mo money now to get mo money, mo money, mo money as they run to Florida or up north on retirement. . Then the bard acts like a lapd g of the Bush admini tration, pushing B ucati arfnan I ce, e powerment and all the other catch word of the "education" p�cmt.-... I Trouble i , the board "reforms" did not pring out of any community dialouge or input. The fancy talk was drafted by 5 million consultants and taken largely from Bush propaganda. Ask any parent of children in the Detroit sy tern what empowerment is, and we'11 bet you can't find five who can provide an answer. Top down reform is no reform, and we understand the teachers objecting to forceed reform. But, adly, both side are 0 caught up in their own agenda they have 10 t ight of the real ill: inequity in education funding. While Detroit students have $3,700 a year pent on their education, there, are uburban schools within a pebble's throw where double that amount is spent. We urge both ides to press the real is ue: the State of Michigan mandate children up to 16 years of age be educated, and the burden of doing that lie with the state. Initiate the necessary reforms to guarantee every school age child equal access to quality education. Both ide in the dispute need to focus on Lansing, that' where the problem is. READERS WRITE D'EVCO corrects the record To the Editor: We were pleased to see two articles in the August 30th i ue of the Michigan Citizen briefly describing Devco' initiative designed to improve the economic situation of Highland Park and its business community. However, the article on the propo ed newsletter was incorrect, and I hope you will be able to publish the following correction to Mr. Siegel's article. Our propo ed 1992 new letter i de igned primarily for the manufacturing, wholesale and distribution business community, to create a network of contacts that can help these basic busines e tabilize or expand. . In addition, we only plan to publish once every other month. (The newspaper article incorrectly stated that we would be publishing twice-a-month.) If the newsletter goes well, and proves useful to our business community,) then we could consider a more active publish­ ing scheduling.) We feel an approach to retail information for the community should be quite different. In the past, we have worked with the Chamber of Commerce, the Michigan Citizen, and individual entrepreneurs, to provide more "retail/community oriented" business news. W IIA V UPPORTED several "Shop in Highland Park" initiative and will continue to do o. Our new letter will certainly include some new about the retail sector, but we feel that advertising and listing such as the "Shop In Your Community and Watch It Grow" ection of the Michigan Citizen i a more appropriate place for retail and community ba ed information. In 1991, the Michigan Citizen provided a feature on a Highland Park busine almo t every week. I found tho e helpful and informa­ tive articl ,and would hope that the Citizen could bring back that feature approach. ' . We look forward to publishing our first new letter by the end of S pternber. We . will evaluate each i sue through the feedback we recieve from our readers. Busine cs or residents who are interested in receiving the n wsletter, or in receiving a copy of th HP Devco "Renort In th Community: 1989-1991", should call our office at ?C\2-01c\"_ Harriet B. Saper teln, President, HP DEVCO, Inc. VIEWS/OPINIONS nd World@1992 An l,w riti ] comm nt. In particul r Broth r Ch rle B rkl y at time during th gam wi th Angola appeared to be too a re iv and even aultive. Th "Brother " from Angolan team were trying to understand the motive of their "Brother" from American who everely elbowed and push d them dunn the gam between the U.S. and Angola. Barkely wa quoted as aying, " ext time. maybe I hould pick on a fat guy. You never know though, tho e kinny guy could wind up being like M nute Bol-got a pear ENGLISH TRANSLATION: YEAH DOG ... JUST HAD TO BUST A FEV'J CAPS, OAT S ALL. BENJA I CHAVIS CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL H • I "QUITI e po d t th Olympi re both economic nd o ial. The di pariti betw n the ri h and poor countie are a tounding. For tho e who live inside the United State, no one can afford to insult, �::4ult, or mi treat others, in particular, in the aftermath of ports events between nations. Everyone hould be thy brothers' and thy i ters' eeper. Ye ,Blac m n can jump, but mak ure you know why you are jumping and what changes it will facilitate. .. _ . SAY BROTHER THAT'S A REALLY NICE COAT. , YES IT IS. AND ALL I HAD TO DO TO GET IT WAS SHOOT A BROTHER IN THE BACK AND TAKEJT. Prison v It' been over a decade ince the unprecedented boom in U.S. prison con truction, leaving this country with the highest incarceration rate in the entire world. Not urprisingly this rna sive tran fer of public taxes to the pri on economy has left tate coffers nearly empty, and many public needs unmet. In a recent report relea ed by the National Conference of State Le gi latures, the e conernic condition of 47 American tates w described as in "dire fiscal straits." The reason i simple: increa ed government spending v . a dimini hed tax base, resulting in s ta te re erve termed" nearl y nonexi tent" and "inadequate." On what has the government been pending? Prisons. Increa ingly, the bulk of America' tax buck goe to uild or maintain America growi ng penal colonie . MUMIA ABU JAMAL ILe ter' YO ... HOME BOY! DAT COAT IS DOPE! A RECENT ABA report, cri tical pre-school • of thi expensive trend, paints a powerful picture of the expensive costs of putting prison needs above social heal th needs. The report, the result of a 3-year tudy by the American Bar Associ a ti 0 n Criminal Jus tice Section, is sharpl y cri tical of incarcertion as dangerously ineffective and, in a en e, elf-defea ting. Instead of decreasing the crime rate, the report contend • the experience of incarceration may actually provoke more crime. "It may be that the experience of being incarcerated inculcate or olidifie anti ocial attitude and behavior and/or foster uch dependency that the likelihood of criminal behavior upon release is much greater for orne than if they had never been incarcerated," the report notes. Prisons, as long have been uspected, are criminogenic, meaning they generate criminal behavior. The report found that it takes the combined annual income taxes of 18 Delaware residents to pay the costs , to incarcerate one person for one year, meaning tho e taxes could not be used for education, health care, environmental protection, or a myriad of other governmental services. FURTH R, THE ABA Report found that the co t of con truction, financing and operating a 1000-cell pri on 'in Wi consin for one year would pay for 11,000 children in that tate's Head Start Program. Presently. orne 30,000 eligible pre- choolers are excluded from participation in the Wisco in Head Start Program b caus of lack of funding. In Penn ylvania, libraries are being closed and university appropriations are being cut 0 that pri ons can be built. The 1992-1993 fi cal year began with co ts for state pri ons at over $500 million, or half FROM' DEATH ROW a billion dollars. California just closed out a budget for its biggest prison expansion in the U.S., with a price tag of nearly 2 billion bucks-in one year! Every hungry, ill-housed, uneducated, unemployed person in the U.S. owes hi wretched condition in some degree, to a poli tician who made a policy deci ion to let a family go homeless, or a child unscho led, 0 that a pri on cell could be bui I t. It is precisely this quasi-economy of legal repre ion that fuels the outer economy of Depression.